tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3852401976091776228.post7654872211773803393..comments2024-03-28T16:39:46.847-04:00Comments on Tellers of Weird Tales: A Little (or a Lot) on Algernon BlackwoodTerence E. Hanleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08268641371264950572noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3852401976091776228.post-42800691072162562312017-12-03T23:01:42.027-05:002017-12-03T23:01:42.027-05:00Thanks for the additions, Marzaat. I haven't r...Thanks for the additions, Marzaat. I haven't read any of those stories, so I wouldn't have come up with them on my own.<br /><br />THTerence E. Hanleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08268641371264950572noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3852401976091776228.post-80826952067625534532017-12-03T22:34:05.873-05:002017-12-03T22:34:05.873-05:00Other rooming house stories:
Fitz James-O'Br...Other rooming house stories: <br /><br />Fitz James-O'Brien's "What Was It?" and "The Lost Room"<br /><br />You can sort of consider Fritz Leiber's novel The Big Time as a sort of drawing room story since it's like a play set in one room despite time travel and alternate time lines.<br /><br />Poe's "The Sphinx" strikes me as one of the grandfather's of the Clarke's White Hart and Asimov's Black Widower stories: a mystery is described and solved in dialogue in a room. However, in Poe's story, the mystery also takes place in the same room.<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com